CHERRY 

 TREES 



Plant sweet varieties 25 feet 

 apart, sour ones 20 feet apart; 

 the Hansen Bush Cherry and 

 the Oka Bush Cherry 4 to 5 feet 

 apart, or 2 feet apart for a 

 hedge. 



First-class trees, except as 

 noted, each $1.00, doz. $10.00, 

 100 S65.00. 



Black Tartarian. (Sweet.) Bears 



many big, black, juicy sweet 



Cherries in late June. 

 Governor Wood. (Sweet.) Rich, 



delicious fruit, pale yellow 



with blushed cheek and extra 



large, in June. 



Improved Montmorency. (Sour.) Most popular and best sour Cherry. 



Bears red fruit, perfect for cocking, late in the season. 

 Lambert. (Sweet.) Jet black when fully ripe. Flesh firm, solid, rich 



and juicy. Tree rugged, strong grower, hardy, encrmous bearer. 



Late July. 



Napoleon. (Sweet.) Many huge Cherries, lemon-yellow in color 

 with red blush, and most delicious, in late June. 



Schmidt's Bigarreou. (Sweet.) Very hardy, with huge, mahogany- 

 red fruit, tender and juicy, in mid-July. 



Yellow Spanish. (Sweet.) Especially recommended since it pro- 

 duces its big yellow fruit, stained crimson, very early in the 

 season; exceptionally juicy and sweet. 



SWEET SEPTEMBER 



(U. S. Plant Patent No. 94.) This fall-bearing Cherry ripens its 

 attractive dark red fruit in early autumn, and, if not picked, the 

 Cherries will hang on the tree, without rotting, until the snow falls. 

 The fruit is of excellent quality, and the tree is exceptionally hardy 

 and prolific. Good strong trees, each S1.75, per 10 S16.50. 



QUINCE TREES 



The compact, rather dwarf-growing trees are beautiful when in 

 bloom, and the fruit is superb for jellies and preserves. 



Plant 10 feet apart each way. 

 Orange. Best by far of all the Quince fam.ily is this early sort, 



which produces huge bright yellow 'ruit, exceptionally delicious. 



First-class trees, each Sl.OO, doz. SIO.OO. 



THE HANSEN BUSH CHERRY 



5 to 6 ft. It is difficult to decide whether this breath-taking 

 discovery is more valuable for its ornamental beauty, or for its 

 fruit. The silvery green foliage, turning red in the fall, bears a 

 great mass of white bloom each spring, making it a charming 

 sight on any lawn. Quantities of medium to dark red Cherries 

 are borne the year after the bush is planted, frequently the 

 same year, and can be used to make a delicious, richly colored 

 jam. 



Plant bushes 2 to 4 feet apart in rows 4 to 6 feet apart in 

 the home garden. 



Stocky, 2-yr. plants, each SOc, doz. S5.00, 100 $35.00. 



THE OKA BUSH CHERRY 



2 to 3 ft. This is a great improvement upon the Hansen Bush 

 Cherry, with larger, lovelier fruit, and even more attractive 

 foliage, the fruit being a rich dark purplish red, with rich pur- 

 plish black-red flesh. Jelly and jam made from Qka Cherries 

 is deliciously sweet and most attractive. 



Stocky, 3-yr. plants, SOc each, doz. $9.00, 100 $80.00. 



PEACH TREES 



Our state has long been famous for the excellence of its Peaches. 

 Plant 18 feet apart each way. 

 First-class trees, each 75c, doz. $7.50, 100 $40.00. 

 Belle (Belle of Georgia). Big white Peaches with red cheeks, de- 

 licious, in mid-August. Freestone. 

 Carman. Pale yellow fruit, blushing on sunny side, with tasty white 

 flesh, in late July. The earliest worth-while Peach. Nearly freestone. 

 Elberta. The leading eastern market variety, with many firm yellow 



Peaches in late August. Freestone. 

 Golden Jubilee. Blushed yellow Peaches with juicy, tender, sweet yellow 

 flesh are' borne on this extra early freestone variety, which is highly 

 resistant to frost injury. 

 Hiley. Very hardy, with a late summer crop of huge white Peaches, 



distinctly blushed. Freestone. 

 Iron Mountain. Best of all the late-fruited sorts, with its big, tasty, white- 

 fleshed Peaches. Freestone. 

 J. H. Hale. Many huge, beautiful yellow Peaches, simply delicious, in 



late summer. Freestone. 

 South Haven. Early to bear, with extra large, blushed yellow fruit of 

 high quality. Freestone. 



PLUM TREES 



GOLDEN 

 JUBILEE PEACH 



Plant 20 feet apart each way. 



First-class trees, each SOc, doz. $9.00, 100 $60.00. 

 Abundance. This introduction of our founder produces big yellow sweet 

 fruit in August. 



Bradshaw. Hardy, with many deep red Plums, delicious when canned. 



Burbank. Many extra large, aromatic, sweet fruits of a rich deep violet- 

 red in mid-August. 



Damson (Shropshire). A strong grower which bears countless purple 

 Plums in the fall. 



Italian Prune. Deep purple Plums with dark blue bloom, juicy and tasty, 



are produced in September. 

 Japanese Gold. Masses of golden fruit, extra delicious. 

 Red June. Very productive of big red Plums, with quality yellow flesh, 



borne in midsummer. 



[42] Fruit Trees 



Lovett's Nursery, Inc. 



